GORDON:"Walmart workers phoned their corporate headquarters to ask how they should handle all the shoppers with unlimited, government-funded spending limits, and were told to keep the registers ringing.

"We did make the decision to continue to accept EBT cards during the outage so that they could get food for their families," Walmart representative Kayla Whaling told KSLA. "

GORDON:"Walmart workers phoned their corporate headquarters to ask how they should handle all the shoppers with unlimited, government-funded spending limits, and were told to keep the registers ringing.

"We did make the decision to continue to accept EBT cards during the outage so that they could get food for their families," Walmart representative Kayla Whaling told KSLA. "

Police say a suspected Weymouth heroin dealer made Internet searches last week to find out "what happens if you rob a bank" - and she found out on Friday, when she and a Bridgewater man were charged with unarmed bank robbery and possession with intent to distribute heroin.

Police Capt. Richard Fuller said Sarah J. McLoud, 27, of Torrey Street, Weymouth, and Robert W. Owens, 28, of Comfort Street in Bridgewater, were arrested at McLoud's residence at 4 p.m. Friday, about five hours after the pair allegedly robbed Weymouth Bank on Columbian Street.

Fuller said that when detectives searched McLoud's home, they identified the cash taken from the bank and clothing that witnesses said the female suspect wore.

A check of McLoud's computer showed recent searches for "if you're going to rob a bank," "what happens if you rob a bank," "what happens if you rob a house," and "what happens if you rob a drug dealer."

Detectives also found heroin packaged for sale in the same room with the computer. Fuller said McLoud was a suspect in an ongoing heroin distribution investigation.

Police obtained a search warrant for McLoud's residence after she and Owens were arrested.

McLoud and Owens were held over the weekend in the Weymouth jail on $10,000 cash bail each. Police charged a third man Daniel M. Murphy, 30, of Washington Street in Quincy, with being an accessory after the fact to the bank robbery, and for a repeat offense of possession of class B Suboxone. He was held on $25,000 bail.

All three will be arraigned Tuesday in Quincy District Court.

McLoud and Owens are also charged with conspiracy to commit unarmed bank robbery and possession with intent to distribute class C Xanax.

Fuller said the robbery occurred at 10:45 a.m. Friday when a female suspect, later identified by detectives as McLoud, demanded money from a teller at the bank. She demanded money with no dye packs, and didn't display a weapon. Other witnesses said a man, later identified by police as Owens, was in the area with her before the robbery.

Fuller said Owens was allegedly involved in planning the robbery, and that Murphy was waiting for them on Torrey Street. Murphy was pulled over and charged at 8 p.m. Saturday, while driving the car believed to be used in the robbery.

The bank is across the street from South Shore Hospital, just one-third of a mile from the Torrey Street address.

And what happens when NoScript is detected and it diverts you to a different error page URL is that you can never allow Javascript on the original page, in effect the site demanding that you turn it on for everywhere.

Private browsing only prevents your significant other from seeing what you were browsing. To block everyone out, including your ISP, you need a VPN.And possibly ToR (though the NSA does run a ton of exit nodes, and hackers running SSL-strip run the rest, so there's that).

And if you want to save things you browse to, or make incriminating lists, for the love of god, do it in a TrueCrypt container with a strong password.